Source: Department of State

Argentina Declassification Project


Fact Sheet
Office of the Spokesperson
Washington, DC
August 8, 2016


President Obama announced during his March 2016 visit to Argentina that the United States would embark on a comprehensive effort to identify additional records related to human rights abuses committed under Argentina’s dictatorship. In a ceremony to commemorate the victims of the dictatorship at the Parque de la Memoria in Buenos Aires, President Obama said, “to continue helping the families of the victims find some of the truth and justice they deserve, I can announce that the United States Government will declassify even more documents from that period including, for the first time, military and intelligence records, because I believe we have a responsibility to confront the past with honesty and transparency.”

On August 4th, Secretary Kerry delivered an initial set of newly declassified records to President Macri. Totaling approximately 1,000 pages, these records are primarily from the Jimmy Carter Presidential Library, Ronald W. Reagan Presidential Library, and George H.W. Bush Presidential Library. Today, these records have been made available to the public at https://icontherecord.tumblr.com/, and will be made available at each of the Presidential Libraries.

The declassification project represents an historic effort by U.S. Government agencies and departments to search, identify, review for public access, and provide records that shed light on human rights abuses in Argentina between 1975 and 1984. In 2002, the United States declassified over 4,000 State Department cables and other documents from the period of the Argentine military dictatorship. These records have helped Argentina hold human rights abusers accountable, for example, by supporting Argentine criminal investigations involving human rights violations under the dictatorship.

This new effort – requested by Argentine President Mauricio Macri and human rights groups – involves over 14 U.S. Government agencies and departments, and is being led by the Office of the Director for National Intelligence (ODNI) with support from the White House. This project involves hundreds of hours of agency staff resources, including records managers, archivists, historians, and declassification and information access professionals. U.S. Government officials are searching their records for relevant information to review for potential public release. The responsive records are being reviewed on a "word-for-word" basis – a more exacting and revealing process than the typical reviews agencies conduct on their historical records, when they release or withhold entire records on a “pass-fail” basis.

U.S. Government agencies are conducting this declassification effort through five major tasks:

The release of this initial set of documents is the first step in a lengthy and ambitious declassification process. In the coming months, there will be more records declassified from the four Presidential Libraries, followed by newly-declassified Federal agency and department records in 2017.